“Now what I admire about the NASA scientists in these cases is they are acknowledging not every single weather event is linked to climate change; it certainly isn’t,” Kluger continued.

If he’d stopped there, he may have earned points for keeping the discussion on track. But instead, Kluger started pushing his own climate change views.

Kluger spent the remainder of the four-minute segment arguing that climate change can undermine national security, that the Paris climate talks were a “very good sign,” and that “the U.S. as the world’s leading emitter has to be willing to take the lead.”

Kluger’s presence on CBS This Morning demonstrated how committed the network is to pushing climate change. On This Morning in 2013, Kluger asserted that doubting global warming is like believing the earth is flat -- yet CBS invited him back.

This CBS This Morning broadcast falls right in line with the media’s habit of accepting climate change rhetoric.

After the 2006 release of former vice president Al Gore’s 2006 film, “An Inconvenient Truth,” media use of the phrase “extreme weather” increased 988 percent. In this broadcast alone, “extreme” was used twice -- first to describe the overall weather patterns now occurring in the US, and then in a prediction by Kluger of heat spikes in summer.

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